4 Answers
4

Ok.... I dont know why, but when im writing Arduino, its not that hard like c/c++ . Thanks😂
– Alex KordatzakisJul 23 '17 at 12:31

Maybe you find it easy because you have never written anything complex in it. And as arduino atmel chips are limited in memory, you wont write there complex applications...
– DivisaderoJul 25 '17 at 12:53

@Divisadero οκ. I understand this. I have wrote complex code.. I have connected to an Arduino UNO an thermal censor, a temperature-humidity censor and a 16pin LCD 11x8 (I think, or 11x6 :)) ). This code was my most complex. (I am learning Arduino with my school for almost a year.)
– Alex KordatzakisJul 25 '17 at 14:16

1

@AlexKordatzakis Do not take it personally, but what you have mentioned are not complex projects at all. I guess you have used the libraries for these projects. I suggest you look into the libraries and try to understand them.
– DivisaderoJul 25 '17 at 14:20

@Divisadero 1st. I'm not taking it personally. :)) 2) I didn't said that I have wrote the most complex code in Arduino.. 3) For the libraries, should I download the arduino program, or just browse them?
– Alex KordatzakisJul 25 '17 at 14:25

To begin as a newbie get started with the inbuilt examples that are already given.You will learn one by one and its easy to understand anyways.Try few simple codes like LED BLINK,LED WITH SWITCH, SENSOR INPUT AND OUTPUT USING SERIAL MONITOR and you will get used to with the ARDUINO IDE.

Ofcourse the best site is www.arduino.cc but try few pdfs for Arduino beginners which are available on the internet.Try youtube if you are having any trouble working out with just text information.

Ok. But I'm already learning. 2 Languages. I started with Swift and now I'm in HTML. I will stop here, and when I learn very smoothly to use these two languages I will move to C++. What do you think?
– Alex KordatzakisJul 25 '17 at 14:45

It is not about being good or bad language. Who am I to say if one programming language is better or worse. But one can say if language is suitable for getting into programming for beginners. For me, personally, C# seems to be best for beginners. It is powerfull enough to learn you OOP, you can try design patterns and .NET contains enough frameworks to try client applications, web and SOA programming. Compared to C++ it abstract more difficult concepts you can grasp later. On the other hand, python seems to be to be too flexible for beginner.
– DivisaderoJul 25 '17 at 14:53

I appreciate for giving me these advices! But now I have to learn two languages and I like these languages.. thank you for the help anyway!!
– Alex KordatzakisJul 25 '17 at 14:56